Panja Sahib: The Miracle that Refused to Happen

Posted on June 28, 2007
Filed Under >Mast Qalandar, History, Minorities, Religion
22 Comments
Total Views: 137794

Mast Qalandar

This story was meant to be a part of the post on Panja Sahib that appeared on these very pages early this year. But I had left it out lest I make the post too lengthy. The post on Panja Sahib stayed on the Discussions Board for a day or two and then disappeared, I thought, forever. But I was intrigued to see recently that it had somehow climbed into the ATP “Top Hits” — somewhere at the bottom rungs, just below the Lal Masjid Assault. I don’t know how to interpret this climb, nor would I want to read too much into it. Is it, perhaps, the result of random hits signifying nothing? Nevertheless, it did make me look up the old story and post this one as a sequel to it.

Here is the story. On the night of October 29, 1922 a special train left Amritsar, headed towards Peshawar. Among the passengers on board were a number of Sikh prisoners who were being shipped to Attock Fort to serve their prison sentence of two and half years each.

These prisoners, and hundreds of others like them, were summarily tried and convicted by the British administration for participating in a non-violent agitation sparked by the Gurdawara Reform Movement at the time. The Reformists wanted to rid the gurdawaras and their shrines of the control of the hereditary “mahants” (somewhat akin to the Muslim gaddi nashins) who had started misusing their positions for personal gains. The British administration, for some reason, seemed to take the side of the mahants and would arrest and punish the protesting Sikhs, often beating them inhumanly, even for minor violations. This provoked more protests, and large-scale arrests and convictions followed.

Because of the clear injustice meted out to them, the prisoners aroused widespread sympathy among the Sikh community and became instant heroes.

The train from Amritsar arrived at Rawalpindi on the morning of 30 October. After the change of the crew and servicing of the engine, it steamed out of Rawalpindi station with the instructions that it was not to stop until it reached Attock. Hasan Abdal, the home of Panja Sahib, fell on the train route and ordinary trains routinely stopped here.

..photo to the left shows rail tracks thorugh Hasan Abdal at present..Â

The word reached the Sikh community at Panja Sahib that the Sikh prisoners would be passing through Hasan Abdal on their way to Attock Fort. This caused a great deal of excitement in the community and they decided that the least they could do was to be present at the station and serve the prisoners a quick meal on the train. So, they had the food prepared and took it to the train station ahead of the expected arrival time of the train.

The stationmaster, when he saw all this excitement at his otherwise sleepy little station, informed the Sikhs that the train was not scheduled to stop at Hasanabdal and, therefore, there was no point of bringing food to the station. The Sikhs implored him to stop the train just long enough for them to serve food to the prisoners. But their entreaties failed. The train will not stop at Hasan Abdal, they were told bluntly. “All right then”, said a strapping young Karam Singh, barely 30, who was among the leaders of the crowd, “We will stop the train!” and added, “if Baba Nanak could stop that massive rock rolling down the hill with one hand, can’t we, so many, stop a train?” Another young man, twenty four year old Partap Singh, chimed in, “Yes, we can, and we will!”

At about ten o’clock, on a crisp and cloudless morning typical of Potohar autumn season, the train emerged from the Margalla pass spewing out clouds of black smoke. When the Sikhs at the station noticed the smoke, a joyous shout went up in the crowd, “Bole so nihal.. sat sri akaal” and many of them, led by Karam Singh, jumped on to the tracks and squatted there cross-legged. Next to Karam Singh sat young Partap Singh followed by others – both men and women. They were convinced in their mind that the train would, somehow, stop.

Approaching the station, the driver noticed from a distance people squatting on the tracks. He simply could not believe his eyes. He was under orders not to stop the train in any circumstances. He blew the whistle long and hard but to no effect. No one budged. He blew the whistle again, and again – and yet again. No one moved. The train continued hurtling towards the station. The horrified driver simply closed his eyes. The vacuum lever (controlling the braking system) dropped from his hands, the wheels screeched against the tracks sending out showers of sparks. There was a loud thud and the train came to a halt – but not before hitting the first man and pushing him into the others raising a mound of mangled bodies. The station was instantly engulfed in shrieks, groans and shouts mingled with the huffing and hissing of the angry steam engine, which, it seemed, was angry at his path being obstructed.

Every one at the station rushed to help, but Karam Singh, who lay mangled and dying, stopped his rescuers by saying: “Serve the food to the hungry prisoners first and then help me”. It took one and a half hours before the tracks were cleared and the prisoners fed (I wonder if they were able to eat) and the train resumed its journey. Bhai Karam Singh died within few hours while Bhai Partap Singh died the next day. It is not known how many others died later but many people were severely injured.

As I said in my post on Bareli to Balakot, miracles do happen but you cannot rely upon them.

Tailpiece: On 15 April, 2007, at the Vesakhi festival at Panja Sahib, the Pakistani federal minister for religious affairs announced to the Sikh pilgrims that the government of Pakistan would build a memorial at Hasan Abdal in memory of the train tragedy that occurred there on October 30, 1922. Commemorating resistance to injustice is, I believe, a good idea.

Note: The story is based on the information gleaned from Internet sources and so are the pictures.

22 responses to “Panja Sahib: The Miracle that Refused to Happen”

  1. Ansar says:

    Very nice post… but I sense it is abut to be highjacked into an irrelevant discussion

  2. woww great story and good to her from our pre-independence days and the events that led to the whole sikh-hindu-muslim rising against the British!!

    Its good that the Minister said that he will build a memorial…. however, lets see if this materializes sooner than later!!

  3. what a revitalizing post, took me back to the time when Ramprasad Bismil wrote his famous poem.
    (no i wasnt there physically :) )
    Somehow the timing of this post serves the right time as we are again in state turmoil.

    It also makes me feel ashamed that here were the people who could give up their lives just to feed the prisoners and here are we just talking and singing…

  4. ahsan says:

    Another nice story! Thanks.

    As for the miracle, there is no parallelism between the present story and that of Bareli to Balakot.

    In the present story, the Sikhs tried to make this miracle happen by their own effort without seeking any help from any divinity.

    On the other hand mujAhedyn entitrly depended on the Divine for their success against the kuffAr. They even made a tactical mistake to take a shelter behind the mountains leaving a free access to the peaks of the mountains to their enemies. Had they studies properly the history of “Battle of Uhud” they would not have commited this error.

    The tactic of the Sikhs of Hasan Abdal to stop the train was correct. Even today the same method is used by the workers on strike to disrupt the Railroad transport. Usually, these persons are removed by Police Force otherwise the trains do stop. In case of Hasan Abdal the train did stop but alas too late. Why?

    There was a time that Indian Government Servants used to be “I beg to remain Sir, Your Most Obedient Servant”. For them the Order was to be stricktly obeyed. A soldier would have shot his own blood-brother if his commander had ordered him to do. Have the thing changes since?

    The mistake of the Sikhs was not tactical but human.

  5. Pervaiz Munir Alvi says:

    MQ. Thank you for another ‘Sikh Story’. Here at ATP we love Sikhs so much that wonder why they did not opt for Pakistan at the first place, and secondly why they left Pakistan en-mass after all. Verses from Quran on Chola (shirt) of a Guru; very heart warming indeed. And the great gesture of Minister for the Religious Affairs, Mr. Ejaz-ul-Huq, the son of Marde-Moman and an other General-President Zia-ul-Huq. We love symbolism. It serves the expedience.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*